It's been quite a while since the last post, I admit, but things here have been very busy. Despite what you might think, the public transport in Berlin is not very good. You can often wait up to thirty minutes for tram, and they don't actually travel that quickly. We've been known to take almost one hour to get to our place, which is actually very much in the centre of the city (or mitte, as the Germans call it). The other thing slowing us down a bit is the weather. It has been 33 or 34 degrees here but very high humidity; I would liken it to Darwin. The locals say this is highly unusual weather, particularly the humidity.
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| It looks like Bourke Street at 5.00 pm, but it's really just the river with countless tourists boats going up and down. |
We've been here three days now, so are starting to get a real feel for the place. It is a very large city, just a bit smaller than Melbourne, with a surprisingly strong Middle Eastern population. While it doesn't have the historic buildings of a Dresden or even Heidelberg (although it does have some spectacular old structures), it's real historical attraction is from the 1930s. Of course, I'm referring to the history of national socialism under Hitler, and the later division of the city into East and West during the Cold War. To be honest, I love the place. It is one of the most vibrant, diverse and exciting cities I've ever been to. It is quite raw, but that is part of its appeal. For her part, I know Alison is not as convinced as I am; its rawness is just a little too raw for her sensitivities.
Yesterday we went to a magnificent static information centre, called the Topography of Terror, which has been built on the former site of the Nazi secret police, the Gestapo. The site also featured a couple of hundred metres of the best preserved section of the Berlin Wall we have seen. There are, of course, other sections dotted around the city (after all, it was over 150 km in length), but most of these are covered with graffiti or artwork. There was an awful lot to read, but all of it was interesting. One thing you cannot escape about the Germans is how they've almost gone out of their way to acknowledge and repudiate the sins of their Nazi past.
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| The Wall. Hundreds of people died trying to get from East to West, fired on by East German border guards. |
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| The brickwork in the foreground are the foundations of the former Gestapo headquarters, uncovered during the cleanup after the building was demolished. |
We also visited the site of the original Checkpoint Charlie, not the original building because that was removed years ago and is now in a museum. No, the site we visited is a cheap imitation intended for dumb tourists, many of them American, who take photos of a fake American GI (for a fee). Checkpoint Charlie was the main crossover point for American and British officials wanting to travel between east and west. The Soviets at one stage attempted to close it off, which led to that very famous photo of American and Soviet tanks facing each other no more than fifty metres apart. Of course, nothing happen because neither side wanted a war to break out. Rather, this period of history became known for it's gesturing rather than any real exchange of firepower, a cold war, if you like.
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| The checkpoint during the standoff of 1961; neither side blinked. |
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| The beautiful tiergarten, which covers a huge area in the city. |
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| Berliners loves its green spaces |
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| The Victory Column. Commemorates the Prussian victory in the Danish-Prussian War. |
Today, we made our way to the suburb of Hohenschoenhausen, which is the home of the former Soviet then East German prison. It was a Soviet prison until 1953, Joseph Stalin's death, and then it became the East Berlin's number one prison for political prisoners of the East German state. The prison, it was more of a torture and interrogation centre than a prison, was under the control of the DGR's secret police, the feared Stasi. At one stage, the Stasi had 90,000 East Germans working for them, and probably another 100,000 not on the payroll but spying on their fellow citizens. It's believed that around one in ten people were being surveiled and had a file kept on them. The prison operated until 1989, when the Wall came down, and the prison is now a memorial to the hundreds of people who died within its walls, and tours conducted, often by former inmates.
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| Hohenschoenhausen Prison |
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| The cells inside the Soviet prison |
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| The cells inside the East German prison. The stout looking German woman in the foreground is actually a wax dummy, supposedly adding some realism to the place. |
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| The interrogation corridor; there were several of them with identical interrogation rooms on both sides. |
For those wanting to learn a bit more about this prison, I can recommend the excellent book Stasiland by Australian writer Anna Funder. If you'd like a read, let me know and you can borrow my copy.